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Gwynne Dyer | US midterms and beyond

Published:Thursday | November 8, 2018 | 12:00 AM

Barack Obama said of the US midterm elections that "the character of our country is on the ballot," and the outcome proved him right. The United States is a psychological basket case, more deeply and angrily divided than at any time since the Vietnam War.

It's not evenly divided, of course. The popular vote saw the Democrats lead the Republicans nationwide by an eight per cent margin, but that translated into only a modest gain in seats in the House of Representatives and in state elections because of the extensive gerrymandering of electoral districts in Republican-ruled states.

The more important truth is that the Republican Party is now almost entirely in the hands of 'white nationalists', and totally controlled by Donald Trump. It's no longer 'conservative'. It's radical right, with an anti-immigrant, racist agenda and an authoritarian style - and about 90 per cent of the Republicans in Congress are white males.

The Democratic Party is multicultural, feminist (84 of the 100 women elected to the new House of Representatives are Democrats), and even socialist. Only one-third of the Democrats in the new Congress will be white men - and almost half the Democrats in the House of Representatives can be classed as Democratic Socialists.

Donald Trump will get little further legislation through Congress, and a Democratic-controlled House will be able to subpoena his tax returns and investigate his ties to Russia, but he didn't lose spectacularly on Tuesday. Indeed, he proclaimed that it was "a great victory" (because that's what he always does, win or lose).

But Trump didn't lose all that badly, either. The Republicans' losses were within the normal range for a governing party in midterm elections, so the political civil war continues unabated.

The divisions will continue and even deepen, because neither of the major American parties understands what is making Americans so angry and unhappy. Donald Trump knows that it is fundamentally about jobs, but he is barking up the wrong tree when he blames it on 'offshoring' and free trade and promises to make the foreigners give the jobs back.

 

No open discussion

 

Many Democrats suspect what the real problem is, but they won't discuss it openly because they have no idea how to deal with it. What is really destroying American jobs is automation.

It's destroying jobs in other developed countries, too, with similar political consequences. The 'Leave' side won the Brexit referendum in the United Kingdom because of strong support in the post-industrial wastelands of northern and central England. The neo-fascist candidate in the last French presidential election, Marine Le Pen, got one-third of the vote because of her popularity in the French equivalent of the US Rust Belt.

But the process is farthest advanced in the United States, which has lost one-third of its manufacturing jobs - eight million jobs - in the past 25 years. Only two million of those jobs were lost because the factories were 'offshored' to Mexico or China, and that happened mostly in the 1990s. The rest were simply abolished by automation.

The Rust Belt went first, because assembly-line manufacturing is the easiest thing in the world to automate. The retail jobs are going now because of Amazon and its ilk. The next big chunk to disappear will be the 4.5 million driving jobs in the United States, lost to self-driving vehicles. Et cetera.

The 'official' US unemployment rate of 3.7 per cent is a fantasy. The proportion of American males of prime working age (25-54) who are actually not working, according to Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute, is 17.5 per cent. Or at least that's what it was when he did his big study two years ago.

Until the major parties can acknowledge that it is the computers that are killing the jobs (and that it probably can't be stopped), the anger will continue to grow. You can't begin to fix the problem until you understand it.

- Gwynne Dyer's new book is 'Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work)'. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.